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#Valerie Amos will soon be the first black head of an Oxford college, after being the first black woman in the UK cabinet and Leader of the House of Lords. “I don’t want that to be a one-off… I’ve lost patience… I’ve been doing this for so long, I expected it to be different.”  CNN

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@Ramakant-P posted:

You are proud of your people. One in 300 million made it.

You should not say that. Blacks have accomplished a lot.  Remember, Ben Carson was the first to separate twins conjoined as the head with a fused brain.

The PNC culture and the Black sub culture bring a lot of unwarranted scorn.  Most good Blacks eventuall join the PPP anyway!

FM
@Ramakant-P posted:

You are proud of your people. One in 300 million made it.

In my Primary School and High School, there were more black teachers than Indos. Back in the days, Indos took to the fields whilst the blacks seek education, jobs in the Police and Civil services where many rose to Permanent Secretaries. 

At 8:00 AM, it's a shame to see how many young Indos were walking the streets in Guyana impaired by drugs and alcohol; and this I saw during the PPP days in office. 

Can you explain the increase of the dougla population in Guyana?

Mitwah
@Mitwah posted:

In my Primary School and High School, there were more black teachers than Indos. Back in the days, Indos took to the fields whilst the blacks seek education, jobs in the Police and Civil services where many rose to Permanent Secretaries. 

At 8:00 AM, it's a shame to see how many young Indos were walking the streets in Guyana impaired by drugs and alcohol; and this I saw during the PPP days in office. 

Can you explain the increase of the dougla population in Guyana?

If the Indians own farms and rice fields, who do you expect to tend to the land? Civil Service jobs were mostly Political and racial appointments, and police was a cop out for the Blacks to send their children for Free, clothes ,food and housing. Indians had Pride, their children worked in the family businesses.  

 You asked about the Dougla population, don't you know of one Race Screwing the other Race and the off spring comes as a Dougla, perhaps some Dougla posters on GNI can explain much better.

 Drugs and alcohol has been a problem since the British occupation, it's not a PPP or PNC thing, but none of the political parties addresses the problem. Here in Canada is no different, the government owns the Alcohol and Drugs stores, they provide Safe Houses for Drugee and collects the highest taxes on Alcohol.    So don't blame PPP for your misfortune.

K
@Ramakant-P posted:

Good! In  see you are defending the blacks.

In Guyana only 5 % of the students are successful.  That is a disgrace to the teachers.

I'm not defending anyone.  Blacks do play an important role in Guyana. Many are teachers and other Civil Servants.  Don't put down everything.  I'm not referring to anyone's politics.

Not sure what you mean 5%.  That's an indictment of the PPP also!

FM
@Ramakant-P posted:

Not according the stats.    When they stopped beating the kids, then we would have better results.

Not sure what you mean here.  Indian teacher also whipped kids.  The practice was inherited and later banned.  Nothing to do with Black or Indian.

I ask, what is this 5% to which you refer.

FM
@Former Member posted:

I'm not defending anyone.  Blacks do play an important role in Guyana. Many are teachers and other Civil Servants.  Don't put down everything.  I'm not referring to anyone's politics.

Not sure what you mean 5%.  That's an indictment of the PPP also!

Yes!  I know that!  The PPP hired 800 interim teachers who couldn't speak and write Grammatically correct English, between 1957 to 1964.

R
@Former Member posted:

Blacks made good teachers.

My first job was teaching, I had Three subjects A Levels GCE, and yes, there were many Black teachers at the school, many with one and two subjects of O Level GCE they were teaching the lower level classes. The only reason the Blacks got the job is because the PNC was in government.

 I don't know of Good Black teachers, what is difficult to teach kindergarten , it more like baby sitting.

K
@kp posted:

My first job was teaching, I had Three subjects A Levels GCE, and yes, there were many Black teachers at the school, many with one and two subjects of O Level GCE they were teaching the lower level classes. The only reason the Blacks got the job is because the PNC was in government.

 I don't know of Good Black teachers, what is difficult to teach kindergarten , it more like baby sitting.

It's the lower classes that defined the direction the primary kids are going.

The books I read were 1.  The principles of teaching and 2. The development of infant education in Guyana.

I learned quite a lot about teaching.

R
@kp posted:

My first job was teaching, I had Three subjects A Levels GCE, and yes, there were many Black teachers at the school, many with one and two subjects of O Level GCE they were teaching the lower level classes. The only reason the Blacks got the job is because the PNC was in government.

 I don't know of Good Black teachers, what is difficult to teach kindergarten , it more like baby sitting.

Well,  there you go. 

My primary and High School had many Afros.  There were Indians also, but about 2/3rd were Afro/Mixed.  Several were from the UK and other countries.  My Kindergarten teacher was an Irish Nun at Hosororo!

FM

Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos

Early life

Amos was born in British Guiana (now Guyana) in South America and attended Bexley Technical High School for Girls (now Townley Grammar School), Bexleyheath, where she was the first black deputy head girl. She completed a degree in Sociology at the University of Warwick (1973–76), and also later took courses in cultural studies at the University of Birmingham and the University of East Anglia.

=============================

Valerie Amos, Baroness Amos

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..._Amos,_Baroness_Amos

https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/cb/Valerie_Amos_DFID_2013.jpg

The Right Honourable The Baroness Amos CH PC

Baroness Valerie Amos pictured during a meeting with UK's International Development Minister Alan Duncan (not shown) in London, 16 May 2013

Valerie Ann Amos, Baroness Amos, CH, PC (born 13 March 1954) is a British Labour Party politician and diplomat who served as the eighth UN Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator. Before her appointment to the UN, she served as British High Commissioner to Australia. She was created a life peer in 1997, serving as Leader of the House of Lords and Lord President of the Council from 2003 to 2007.

When Amos was appointed Secretary of State for International Development on 12 May 2003, following the resignation of Clare Short, she became the first Black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) woman to serve as a Cabinet minister. She left the Cabinet when Gordon Brown became Prime Minister. In July 2010, Secretary-General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon announced Baroness Amos's appointment to the role of Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator.[2] She took up the position on 1 September 2010 and remained in post until 29 May 2015. In September 2015 Amos was appointed Director of SOAS, University of London,[3] becoming the first black woman to lead a university school in the United Kingdom.[4] In 2019, it was announced that Amos will become the first-ever black head of an Oxford college, University College, from 1 August 2020, succeeding Sir Ivor Crewe.[5][6]

Early life

Amos was born in British Guiana (now Guyana) in South America and attended Bexley Technical High School for Girls (now Townley Grammar School), Bexleyheath, where she was the first black deputy head girl. She completed a degree in Sociology at the University of Warwick (1973–76), and also later took courses in cultural studies at the University of Birmingham and the University of East Anglia.

Chief Executive of the Equal Opportunities Commission

After working in Equal Opportunities, Training and Management Services in local government in the London boroughs of Lambeth, Camden and Hackney, Amos became Chief Executive of the Equal Opportunities Commission 1989–94.

In 1995 Amos co-founded the consultancy firm Amos Fraser Bernard and was an adviser to the South African government on public service reform, human rights and employment equity.

Other positions

Amos has also been Deputy Chair of the Runnymede Trust (1990–98), a Trustee of the Institute for Public Policy Research, a non-executive Director of the University College London Hospitals Trust, a Trustee of Voluntary Service Overseas, Chair of the Afiya Trust, Member of the board of the Sierra Leone Titanium Resources Group, a director of Hampstead Theatre and Chair of the Board of Governors of the Royal College of Nursing Institute.

In September 2015 she became the ninth director of SOAS University of London, she is the first woman of African descent to be director of an institute of higher education in Great Britain.[3][4] In 2019 she co-led a report by Universities (UUK) and the National Union of Students (NUS) addressing the disparity between the proportion of 'top degrees' (first or 2:1 degrees) achieved by white and black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME) students.[7]

House of Lords

Amos was elevated to the peerage in August 1997 as Baroness Amos, of Brondesbury in the London Borough of Brent.[8][9] In the House of Lords she was a co-opted member of the Select Committee on European Communities Sub-Committee F (Social Affairs, Education and Home Affairs) 1997–98. From 1998 to 2001 she was a Government Whip in the House of Lords and also a spokesperson on Social Security, International Development and Women's Issues as well as one of the Government's spokespersons in the House of Lords on Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs. Baroness Amos was appointed Parliamentary Under-Secretary for Foreign & Commonwealth Affairs on 11 June 2001, with responsibility for Africa; Commonwealth; Caribbean; Overseas Territories; Consular Issues and FCO Personnel. She was replaced by Chris Mullin.

International Development Secretary and Leader of the House of Lords

Baroness Amos was made International Development Secretary after the incumbent, Clare Short, resigned from the post in the run-up to the US and UK 2003 invasion of Iraq. Although she ostensibly worked in development, she toured African countries that held rotating membership of the Security Council, encouraging them to support the attack.

Baroness Amos was appointed Leader of the House of Lords on October 6 2003, following the death of Lord Williams of Mostyn, which meant that her tenure as Secretary of State for International Development lasted less than six months.

On February 17 2005, the British Government nominated Lady Amos to head the United Nations Development Programme.[10]

Non-Governmental roles

Baroness Amos left the cabinet when Gordon Brown took over as Prime Minister from Tony Blair in June 2007. Brown proposed her as the European Union special representative to the African Union.[11] However, Belgian career diplomat Koen Vervaeke was appointed to this role instead. She was a member of the Committee on Commonwealth Membership, which presented its report on potential changes in membership criteria for the Commonwealth of Nations at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting 2007 in Kampala, Uganda.

On 8 October 2008 it was reported that Amos was to join the Football Association's management board for England's bid to host the 2018 World Cup. This was described as a "surprise appointment", since she has no recorded interest in football (despite her interest in cricket) or any experience in similar work such as the 2012 Olympics bid.[12]

British High Commissioner to Australia

On 4 July 2009 it was advised that Baroness Amos had been appointed British High Commissioner to Australia in succession to Helen Liddell (now Baroness Liddell).[13] Amos took up the position in October 2009.[14]

UN Emergency Relief Coordinator

In 2010 United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon announced Amos's appointment as Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator.[15] In March 2012 she visited Syria on behalf of the UN to press the Syrian government to allow access to all parts of Syria to help people affected by the 2011–2012 Syrian uprising.[16]

In 2015, World Health Organization (WHO) Director General Margaret Chan appointed Amos as member of the Advisory Group on Reform of WHO's Work in Outbreaks and Emergencies with Health and Humanitarian Consequences.[17] Since 2019, Amos has been serving on the Center for Strategic & International Studies’ (CSIS) Task Force on Humanitarian Access, co-chaired by Cory Booker and Todd Young.[18]

Honours

Lady Amos was awarded an Honorary Professorship at Thames Valley University in 1995 in recognition of her work on equality and social justice. On 1 July 2010, Amos received an honorary doctorate (Hon DUniv) from the University of Stirling in recognition of her "outstanding service to our society and her role as a model of leadership and success for women today."[19] She has also been awarded the honorary degrees of Doctor of Laws (Hon LLD) from the University of Warwick in 2000[20] and the University of Leicester in 2006.[21]

At the University of Birmingham, where she studied as an undergraduate, the Guild of Students have named one of the committee rooms "The Amos Room" after her, in acknowledgement of her services to society.[citation needed]

Amos was appointed a Companion of the Order of the Companions of Honour (CH) in the 2016 Birthday Honours for services to the United Nations and emergency relief.[22][23]

In 2017, Baroness Amos was awarded a honorary degree at Middlesex University, thereby "recognising achievement at the highest level as well as dedication to public duty and making a difference to others' lives."[24]

In July 2018, Baroness Amos received an honorary Doctor of Laws degree from the University of Bristol.[25]

She was elected to American Academy of Arts and Sciences - International Honorary Member (2019). [26]

Personal life

Amos is an enthusiast of cricket and talked about her love of the game with Jonathan Agnew on Test Match Special during the lunch break of the first day of the England v. New Zealand test match at Old Trafford in May 2008.[27][28]

After resigning from the cabinet, Baroness Amos took up a directorship with Travant Capital, a Nigerian private equity fund launched in 2007.[29] In the House of Lords Register of Members Interests she lists this directorship as remunerated.[30]

Baroness Amos has never married and has no children. She was listed as one of "the 50 best-dressed over-50s" by The Guardian in March 2013.[31]

References

FM

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